tv News Al Jazeera March 29, 2023 8:00am-8:31am AST
8:00 am
but she didn't get back on subsequent stories. the listening post doesn't cover the news. it covers the way the news is covert to suppress moderate. and in some cases, amplify the content you see on your timeline. the listening post on al jazeera, around 3 quarters of sub saharan africa. cultural heritage is on display in western museums. it didn't happen over night. we were rob gilbert time. the 1st episode reveals how europeans colonization removed tens of thousands of artifacts and the appeal struggle to reclaim restitution. africa stolen on episode one blunder. oh, now jazeera ah,
8:01 am
well, mexico, as president says, migrants fearing deportations. that mattress is on fire at a migration detention center near the u. s. border. so i see 8 people died. ah, and money inside this is out. is there a lie from dough? so coming up, unrest grows in france with more mass strikes against president emanuel buchholz pension reforms. he remains defiance. he went to pates and international mechanism to find thousands of syrians who disappeared during the civil war. and al jazeera goes on patrol with the congolese all me off to it. re take some territory from the m 23 armed green. ah,
8:02 am
protests being held at a migrant detention center in mexico with 38 people were killed in the fire on monday knives. the families of the victims of blaming authorities for the incident . they say they're not getting any answers. earlier, mexico's president said that the blaze broke out when migrants asylum seekers set fire to mattresses after discovering they were being reported. the incident happened in the northern city of c, a. dod hot as near the border with the united states, john home and reports following serv ambulances. they came too late for many the fires of migration detention facility in the mexican border city of what is had already claimed dozens, many of them go to mullens, some venezuelans. i know desperate relatives had nothing to do but moon. wait for news. they said, now you can have a relative die and they don't tell you he's dead. nothing. immediately there were
8:03 am
questions. chiefly, how did the fivestar in his early morning press conference, mexico's president arrived with answers. it was the migrants themselves. he said, a storm to get it. this had to do with a protest that they started. when they found out they will be deported. they put mattresses, the shelters, doors, and set fire to them. they didn't think it would cause a terrible tragedy. protests have happened before met screw state migration centers . those who stepped through the doors often described the most overcrowded prison. but this time around, there were more questions. how did authorities allow this to happen to those under their care? dangly? venezuela? migrant says she was outside when it happened that i've been waiting for their father since 1 pm. it told me they were going to hand him over to me. then at 10 pm, we started to see smoke billowing from everywhere. everybody ran away,
8:04 am
but they left the men locked in. everybody was removed from the area, but they left men locked and they never opened the door. i sued at bodies where the detention center is located, has become a pressure cooker in recent months with large numbers of migrants and asylum seekers staying there before a push to get to the us about shelter heads and activists of accused authorities of criminalizing them on monday, night the pressure cooker blew over. now, amid the grief, the inquest will begin. john hohmann al jazeera mexico city. ari sawyer is the us border research of human rights watch. she says that conditions in the migrant detention facilities often dia, these deaths and injuries are the direct result of the trends. policy is right carried out by us in mexico. i focus on criminalizing migrants and phone seekers instead of legal process. so we've documented that human rights watch the abusive
8:05 am
conditions that need facilities, and we understand that the migrants were protesting. 4 conditions there, there were protesting, lack of water, hadn't given any water. video that i've just seen shows that show appears to show immigration official meeting locked inside of the fireplace on so completely inexcusable. also those doors are, they don't have an easy release. there's no electronic release, the key and we know that there are physical abuse inside the detention facilities are often overcrowded. and you understand that that particular attention facility is you know, in the mexican government, right? so that they're called shelters, they call them shelters, but they are detention facilities. people are locked up and they were overcrowded in that particular room. us president joe biden has urged israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu to abandon
8:06 am
a planned overhaul of the judiciary. like many strong squares, israel, i'm very concerned concerned that they get this grade. it cannot continued on the road. and i go to made that clear. i hopeful, hopefully a prime minister will act in a way that he and try to work out some genuine compromise. what needs to be seen on monday, netanyahu put the legislation on hold, following the biggest protest in the nation's history. the proposed changes include giving politicians greater power. the 2 judges opponent say they'll give the governing coalition unchecked authority lesson. yahoo has responded to biden's comments. he tweeted that israel makes its own decisions based on the will of the people and says domestic matters will not be influenced by prussia from abroad,
8:07 am
including from allies. wrong can be, is, is a journalist for the jewish telegraphic agency. he says the delay to be digests or forms might be tactical. one thing that netanyahu might be looking out for it by agreeing to this delay of a month is a hope that perhaps the, the protests will die down and then they won't pick up steam again after a month. and that, that, you know, the only people who will be protesting will be people who are further to the left. and there won't be as much into identification with them among israelis. i think that might, unless there's real progress in these negotiations and they do come up with compromises or they, you know, or even come up with the constitution. who knows? i don't think that's the case. i think that the sticks are too high for the protesters have come out. and if the, if there's no progress other the, the protests will resume this has been such a show of force among the opposition. it's like, you know, the effect of coming together and realizing that there are more people who are like
8:08 am
you think this way, but in this case it's like there are hundreds of thousands who are like you who think this way. i think he hopes to put it back in the bottle is keep ticking, keeps on talking as if he can put it back in the bottle. on the one hand, he says there are patriots among the protesters. on the other hand, he said like in the same speech, he that they're bought and paid for that this is a, you know, somehow gras tops instead of a grass roots movement. if he doesn't see this is a grass roots movement. busy the key, he's grasping it yet and until he does grasp lee, the breadth of the opposition to his the proposed performs. ah, he's not going to even think about putting the genie back into the bottle. has been another day of protests on the streets of france. tens of thousands of people marched against president emanuel mac raul's pension reformers. these are some of the images from cities across the country. the demonstrations were mostly peaceful that there were some confrontations between protesters and police. people are angry as the president forced through a bill,
8:09 am
raising the retirement age from 60 to 64 without a vote in parliament. natasha butler reports from paris. some protesters burned bins and clash with police in paris during a demonstration that was otherwise peaceful. thousands of students and public sector workers once again in the st. angry with french president emmanuel, my horse engine, reform. it is government's decision to force it through parliament by decree, but critical down among may be the government is finally starting to hear that many french people are against this reform and against mycroft are not listening. as the reform raises the retirement age from 62 to 64, which we don't want enforcing it through parliament proves that there is no more democracy in france. protests as wanted government to scrap the reform at my house as the changes are necessary to sustain the countries pension system for future generations. this is a 10 nationwide strike since the beginning of the year. now it's hard to think of
8:10 am
the deadline between the trade unions are needed and the french government will lead. when the frances main trade union leaders says each time what's the mediation, he form it when they need to suspend raising the retirement age to 64. thanks, what angers people most of the one thing over the next month or so we should appoint mediators, what so everyone can say what they want to a plan swiftly rejected by the government or pro spotted delectable. we can talk to each other directly. president has already said is ready to resume the unions. what is the constitutional court's proved a new lo, michael could find the build into law within weeks reforming the pension system was one of his campaign promises. but the changes the comment, of course, as anger against the subsiding butler, i'll just say we're paris. well, gabriel latan here is an associate professor at the university of paris. he says,
8:11 am
the scale of the process show that nicole has lost the support of french people. we do have a couple 1000 people who are there to disturb, to hope that you know, they'll make the news by, you know, destroy mcdonalds and the like. that is an issue of course. but what i think is the real news is that for such a sustainable movement to exist, you need lots and lots of people to demonstrate time in time. again, as we have yet again today. and it doesn't feel like such a single issue movement. we care about the pension issue because in truth, in france, we have an unemployment problem for people past their past 60. once or 60, it's really hard to find a job unemployment for 6 year old and up is $35.00 is 65 percent true. so that's, that's the 1st issue and also we feel like we've been contributing, we've done our port. inflation is, you know, complicated. 15 percent. politics is all about doing the right thing at the right time. this is, this is a horrible time and this is yet again, a reform that will distribute wealth in the way that doesn't feel fair to french
8:12 am
full who, as you know, we care about equality. the method that the presence has employed over the past few weeks is one of not paying attention to the situation. i myself, i have voted for him during the presidential election because i did not want a sinner for big fall right leader to win. but i did so knowing that he would not exactly redistribute wealth, no way that i would see fit. now i don't think he cares. he was supported by many people like i. and he just goes on thinking that using the right thing. and i think that's a mistake was politics is all about, you know, balancing power. please say that the person who opened fire to school in the u. s. city of nashville on monday, legally, board 7, firearms in recent years. 28 year old audrey hail, a former student at the school, kill 3 children and 3 adults, and he's have released body count footage showing the moment. hale was killed by offices. john hendern reports. audrey hale slowly pulls into the parking lot of
8:13 am
covenant school. the shooter fires through a locked glass door to gain entry in combat gear armed with one assault rifle and toting, another hail wanders the halls of the christian school looking for victims. it's a tale of horror told through the surveillance footage released by nashville police officers badge cameras capture the response. please get the call at 1013 shot fire . they're out there. learning the lessons of the 2022. you've all the texas school shooting where police wasted, precious minutes is a gunman, fired on children. let go. these officers act fast. ah, madras, room by room is fire, alarm sound off the officers clear the 1st floor. a. they rush toward the sound of gunfire and close it was now with
8:14 am
with the attacker, a former student down soon to be declared dead. it's over at 10, 27 am. 14 minutes after police received the call. in that time, hail his gun down 39 year old students and 3 staffers in their sixties police. a hail had amassed an arsenal. we've determined that al grade bald 7 farm from 5 different local gun stores here legally to will result weapons. president joe biden who fought for a federal assault weapons ban congress passed in 1994, only to watch it expire 10 years later. once again calls for another ban of the weapons. hail used to kill resonation. we owe these families more than our prayers . we owe them action, and all we have to do more of stuff is convolt repeat two's part ripping apart the soul. this mission vector children. so they learn how to read,
8:15 am
writes duck cover class with there is almost no chance of passing another ban. this is the 2021 christmas card picture of the congressmen who represents the nashville district, where it all happened. andy ogles, posing with his family bearing assault weapons, a portrait of intransigence, and the effort to change gun laws in america. john henry m l g 0. 2 women have been killed in a knife attack at a muslim sent, and the portuguese kept a lisben. and he shot and arrested the assailant after ignored their warnings. is one person was injured. authority say, the suspect is an afghan refugee, and that his victims worked at the center. prime minister and tanya costa says, the evidence suggests that the attack was an isolated incident slat on the al jazeera, a blow to opponents. if man magenta's the policy for melita on sunset,
8:16 am
she is dissolved and the international olympic committee makes a key recommendation on the future of russian and fellowship. ah. hello, the weather's looking a little lively across parts of the middle east at the moment. the curl of cloud spilling out of the caucuses, running right down southern parts of the arabian peninsula, but it is tending to push its way further east was trying to clear through across the web and potential that is generally dry. we got a few showers just clinging on to the far south, maybe down towards yemen. selim, end of the red sea where to weather when she weather still in place there into afghanistan. and boy with us when she, whether they're into a good part of to care to for celsius, an anchor, a couple of days ago, work at 10 or 11 celsius warmer than that. so that is something of
8:17 am
a shock to the system that snow. try to pull this way out of the way as we go one through thursday, by thursday. you might catch your chair, we're to, it's a central pass of saudi arabia, wheel chair or 2 just around southern parts of central africa pushing across west africa. the son of course, making his wife by the north to the showers about where they should be north, that it is generally dry, little breezy. and it's a cool breeze for each it kyra around $26.00 celsius for the winds. coming in from the north. main while we have some wet weather straight right across central parts of africa. heaviest downpours have of course, to the south that one or 2 showers, right to south africa. ah. in a post colonial whoop, the scars of european imperialism, randi nowhere more so than in the democratic republic of congo, where the history still shapes the presence of the cerebral. yet infamous insight
8:18 am
through the eyes whistleblower. the patriotic military commander, weakness presents this comb, goal honor j. 0 lou ah, you're watching out a 0 mind if our top stories this our, the see 8 people have died in a fight at a migrant detention center and mexico. the president says the blaze broke out when my grandson assad, m. c has set eyes and mattresses off to discovering that were being devoted. tens of thousands of people have launched in cities across france for tenths day of mass
8:19 am
strikes against pension reform. unions and work is angry. i'm. the president raised the retirement age without a vote in parliament. police in the u. s. and released body count footage sharing offices confronting a shoe, so kill 6 people in a christian school in nashville on monday. a say the attack had legally bolts 7, firearms in recent years. the political party of me on miles form anita on santucci has been dissolved by the election commission. the national league for democracy failed to register on the new strict electoral laws brought in by the genta. tony chung reports from young gone. the building behind me is the headquarters of the national league, but democracy was once the party of government. here a miramar is now being dissolved by the election commission. they say that because it didn't register under new rules for elections
8:20 am
a cannot take off. the military governments spokesman told al jazeera the any and l div parliamentary members who wish to stay with different parties. a very welcome to do so. but the n l d itself says from hiding this is an illegitimate government, and any other actions they organize, it will not recognize. but that creates a problem for the military government. there is only one thinker who can possibly unite, what is now a very divided country. that is unsound sushi, the n l d 's, former leader, who is now in jail. the rest of her natural life, tony cheng al jazeera, ma'am. thousands of syrians have gone missing during the countries prolonged conflicts. now the united nations, as pushing for answers, syrian families have long been calling for a mechanism to find their loved ones are diplomatic. edison james base has the story from un headquarters in york. after 12 years of war,
8:21 am
the united nations estimates there are about a 100000 people missing in syria, detained or abducted. their relatives don't know if they're alive or dead. now, the united nations is preparing to set up a new body to investigate. the corner stone is the establishment by the general assembly of a new international institution to clarify the faith and whereabouts of the missing and to provide support to victims and their families. i urge all member states to act, and i call on the government of cd and all, all parties with the conflict to corporate. it is essential to help syrians healed and remove an obstacle to securing sustainable peace. warfare. mustafah welcomes the idea of the new institution. she hopes it could bring her family news about her father ali, who was abducted by armed men in 2013. i spent the past 9 years than 8 months of my life. talking about the moment i lost my dad. and it's and,
8:22 am
and it's still very, very difficult. i mean, it seems, it seems our life for a very changed it. it started us, you know, i, i live alone in germany. i have my mom and my sister in canada. i have another sister in the us. we were so mindy. and then that moment when my father was for you, disappeared by debit day by the gym in 2013. that for me, the and the tory ever so i spent, i spent that i still spend the every day of my life am trying to find an answer for one single question. is my dad a life? the fact that the syrian government seats in the general assembly meeting was empty, is pretty telling huge. the un already has a commission of inquiry on syria, an international impartial, independent mechanism, as well as the teams led by the us special envoy and the un high commissioner for
8:23 am
human rights. and yet on the issue of the missing the government of syria has not cooperated with any of them. many diplomats fear the sad regime will also ignore the new body which the you in hopes to have up and running. in a matter of months, james bayes al jazeera of the united nations tennis in authorities has started turning off, was a supplies that night in parts of the capital, tunis and all the cities. it's an attempt to reduce consumption as the country is suffering from a severe drought to his ears. low on watch reserves and crucial dams are well below capacity shortages. adding to an ready 10 situation caused by hun flayson and a weak economy. a dale to being elected scottish national party leader hens i use us has been officially confirmed as scotlands, fast minister to lead the country semi autonomous palm and following the shock
8:24 am
resignation of his predecessor, nicholas sturgeon last month. it is nadeem baba reports from edinburgh. the s and b is still has a long way to go to achieve its aim, a full independence from the u. k. he's got the backing of the scottish parliament. that's the easy part. but as hums, a usage settles in scotland, spurs, minister, selling his vision for the nation may be tougher at all. i've always believed that leadership is about running towards and embracing challenges rather than shying away from them. we might not be able to achieve everything we want all the time and all at once. but every day an office has an opportunity to make things a bit better than they were yesterday. just down the road from parliament, john carlo to sorta runs a fudge making business with his brother. the firms been in the family for 3 generations. john carlo would rather scotland stay in the family known as the united kingdom. and he wants the scottish government to focus on countering the hom, done by bricks it trying to make it easier for people even just to come over
8:25 am
make it easier for businesses should be like less sanctions on things like trying to improve good stuff. other businesses, i think we suffer from these things, yusef said he's going to concentrate on things like improving charles care and public health services. this couple are expecting their 3rd child as supporters of the scottish national party. they agree, independence can wait. you know, of the western star seen there. are there same peek here about as independence and or you know, there let another thing slate. so i think maybe if we get other things and police flashed them mc and bolton and fred independence, step away from picturesque parts of the capital like this. and you'll get an i dear . of the challenges facing comes a uses. for example, a recent survey shows 4 percent of scottish households use the food bank in the year to march 2022. that's more than anywhere else in britain. apart from northern
8:26 am
england. not surprising then that the 1st minister has said the cost of living crisis is his top priority. but even here in working class, leave, some people say independence should not be relegated to the bottom of the pio top of that class chapter. the cas. yes. nicholas 13 can do my darling done business badger trying again as i and only stops us. yusef says he'll need to convince many more people. independence is a good idea. some may be beyond convincing. i'm happy the annual and then i just professional liason. of course, nobody is predicting scotland will break away any time soon, but the government hopes improving the economy could prepare the ground for another go at a referendum. the team barber al jazeera edinburgh, more foreign troops arriving in the democratic republic of congo to be suffice against the end. 23 armed group calls from regional leaders. the rebels to seize fire on with straw, haven't stopped the violence. and as mach more reports,
8:27 am
the government is facing accusations of using another alms group to fight the m $23.00. just 2 weeks ago, fighters from the n 23 armed group held this hill top, then democratic republic of congo, government forces fought them off. it booming saki from colonel showed us around. he told us it's from here, the 1023 fighters shout, the town of sark a. down below. most of the people here run away. but now a few coming back to collect crops and take them to town. now, when you might look, we cannot go further than him because the rebels are not far away. we used to go up into the hills to bring cassava and other foods. but now you cannot go there because you will meet the rebels cup. con guys. army said he's been fighting rwandan soldiers here under the guise of the m. 23 armed groups. rwanda deny is backing in 23. the government for say that they're the ones that are holding the si,
8:28 am
fi and m 23 is not. they want to show us some of that position with the recent fly thing near the town of western widely reported to be between m. 23 and an armed group. condos armies widely believed to have supported arms, groups in its fight against them. 23. the army denies it. they say that withdrawing was i reinforcing in other areas m $23.00 playing a game and misleading regional leaders and the international community. regional leaders ascending troops under the banner of an east african force. randi and soldiers arrived earlier this month. it hasn't stopped the fighting more than a 100000 people have been forced from their homes as m 23 advanced over the last year. some of the people in this camp from the town of new shockey, which is one of the places the n 23 says it's handed over to the burgundy and
8:29 am
troops, men see it. we know the east african forces are there and shocking, but we also know that collaborating with m $23.00 fighters on nearby. this is why we refusing to go back was kick off a lot of shot back up in the hills. the colonel took us to the armies most forward position. a few 100 burundi and troops meant to control the territory beyond here. but he says m 23 fighters is still hiding in houses across the valley. many people have question why the government hasn't done more to enable its own forces to stop him 23. now they're wondering if more foreign forces will actually help malcolm web al jazeera, la pango, democratic republic of congo. the international olympic committee has recommended that russians and bella russians be allowed to compete on international competitions on the neutral flags. they were bound after russia's invasion of
8:30 am
ukraine last year, but the committee stopped short of announcing a decision on athletes participation in next year. paris olympics russians and by the russians have been competing as neutrals in some sports. in the most reason, serious of consultations, the olympic movement, stakeholders reiterated the firm restriction of any political interference in the autonomous authority of sports organizations to decide on participation in their competitions. this clear and strong reaction to political interference was considered necessary. because if governments took over the decisions regarding which athletes can take part, in which competitions it would be the end of world sport as we know it today.
29 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on